ranger, ranger, ranger...ranger wrote: Yea, in this internet age, you are only as good as your worst moment, which someone has caught on their cell phone.
So you'd better shoot low and be safe!
Don't take any risks!
ranger
You don't shoot high. You don't take risks. You make a fool out of yourself by setting unattainable goals (6:16 2K and related set-in-stone trials/paces) and failing to get anywhere close to them.
Shooting high would have been aiming for the 55s ltw record. There's still a chance you'll get it, but you aren't preparing like you should be, making the same mistakes over and over for the last 5 years.
Part of the reason for this is that you are completely detached from reality. "I saw 1:48/23spm on the monitor for a few strokes today, this is going to be my marathon pace even though I can't hold it for more than a few hundred meters right now." "My MHR is 190+ --even though I haven't seen that number in years-- so when I'm panting and sweating buckets at 170+ and having to take breaks every 5 minutes, I'm really only barely at my aerobic/anaerobic/schizoaerobic threshold".
Which brings us to your next bit of lunacy:
[/quote]ranger wrote:hjs wrote:you rowed like hell to get your liftime Pb
No, it wasn't my lifetime pb.
My lifetime pb is 6:27.5.
Sure, I rowed hard.
What you do in a 2K doesn't depend on how hard you row, it depends on your preparation.
At Baltimore in 2006, I rowed 6:29.7 at 55 without preparing for it.
ranger
What hjs meant, and what is certainly true, is that you were trying to beat 6:27.5 on that day and came up just a bit short. Nothing shameful at all about that.
However, you claim you didn't prepare for it (no sharpening, blahblahblah). Fact is, since you essentially do only fartlek rowing at pretty high intensity (HR going over 170, ie over whichever threshold you want, sweating buckets, etc.), year-round, you are in fact enduring a constant regimen of disorganized, half-hearted sharpening. You haven't been preparing well, but you sure as hell HAVE been preparing, almost in spite of yourself.
You don't even follow your own advice. You say you just need to row a bit longer every day at 1:48/23spm, but you never do. You say you will/should lengthen your sessions from 15 OTE and 10 OTW to 20/20 over the summer, but you don't even take a single stroke in that direction. You say lots of things, and you never do them. Because you're using the wrong numbers (to say nothing of the wrong units, more often than not) and therefore can't bridge the gap between fact and fiction. If you had bothered to set attainable goals and come to grips with your true level of fitness, you could have performed much better recently.
The world will never know if ranger's training methods are worthwhile, because even ranger doesn't train like ranger says he should.
Oh well.